Armistice / Remembrance Day is fast approaching

Posted: 8th November 2025

 


Armistice / Remembrance Day is fast approaching. You can find or add a local event to the calendar hereYou can also create your own event, and it need not be on November 11. For example, the WBW chapter in Madison, Wisconsin, is working with veterans groups to hold an event on November 19. 

 

This is also a great time to take online action to end wars. The U.S. Senate voted last night for the second time to NOT prevent a war on Venezuela (and the U.S. House is illegally refusing to hold a vote). Take action now to help end war in . . .

 

Why We Can Use This Moment

 

November 11, 2025, is Remembrance / Armistice Day 108 — which is 107 years since World War I was ended in Europe (while it continued for weeks in Africa) at the scheduled moment of 11 o’clock on the 11th day of the 11th month in 1918 (with an extra 11,000 people dead, wounded, or missing after the decision to end the war had been reached early in the morning — we might add “for no reason,” except that it would imply the rest of the war was for some reason).

In many parts of the world, principally but not exclusively in British Commonwealth nations, this day is called Remembrance Day and should be a day of mourning the dead and working to abolish war so as not to create any more war dead. But the day is being militarized, and a strange alchemy cooked up by the weapons companies is using the day to tell people that unless they support killing more men, women, and children in war they will dishonor those already killed.

 

For decades in the United States, as elsewhere, this day was called Armistice Day, and was identified as a holiday of peace, including by the U.S. government. It was a day of sad remembrance and joyful ending of war, and of a commitment to preventing war in the future. The holiday’s name was changed in the United States after the U.S. war on Korea to “Veterans Day,” a largely pro-war holiday on which some U.S. cities forbid Veterans For Peace groups from marching in their parades, because the day has become understood as a day to praise war — in contrast to how it began.

 

Here are resources to make Armistice / Remembrance Day a day to mourn all victims of war and advocate for the ending of all war.

For a world beyond war,

David Swanson
Executive Director
World BEYOND War

Find out more – call Caroline on 01722 321865 or email us.